Area Forecast Discussion
Issued by NWS Upton, NY

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817
FXUS61 KOKX 040549
AFDOKX

Area Forecast Discussion
National Weather Service New York NY
149 AM EDT Sat May 4 2024

.SYNOPSIS...
High pressure along the New England coast will remain nearly
stationary into Saturday. A cold front then slowly approaches
from the west on Sunday and moves across the area Sunday night
into Monday. The boundary likely stalls to our south Monday
afternoon through Tuesday before returning as a warm front
Wednesday. A series of frontal waves may impact the area to end
the week.

&&

.NEAR TERM /UNTIL 6 AM THIS MORNING/...
Forecast remains on track tonight.

A high amplitude upper ridge over the eastern third of the
country will be slow to translate east through the first half
this weekend. This will keep surface high pressure ridging down
along the New England coast and into our area. Expect a light
easterly flow to continue with varying amounts of cloud cover.
Satellite imagery shows a fair amount of high clouds moving
through the upper ridge axis. This could impact temperatures
somewhat depending on the opacity. Lows will generally be in the
mid to upper 40s, but around 50 for the NYC metro.

&&

.SHORT TERM /6 AM THIS MORNING THROUGH 6 PM SUNDAY/...
Not much change during this time as the forecast area will
remain under an easterly flow at 10 mph or less. Varying amounts
of high clouds will filter through the upper ridge over the
area on Saturday, which works to the east Saturday night. Clouds
will lower and thicken Saturday night with some fog possible
toward daybreak Sunday. Warm advection rain on the backside of
the ridge, ahead of an approaching warm front, continues to
trend slower. Chances of rain Saturday night remain low and
mainly after midnight. Temperatures during this time will at or
just below normal.

&&

.LONG TERM /SUNDAY NIGHT THROUGH FRIDAY/...
*Key Points*

*An approaching front will bring rain Sunday into Sunday night,
which ends early Monday morning. Rainfall amounts average one
quarter to one half inch.

*The front stalls to our south early next week with limited chances
for showers through Tuesday.

*Unsettled conditions are likely Wednesday through next Friday,
although not a wash out. Several frontal waves are possible, which
may bring periods of showers, but timing is uncertain.

*Below normal temperatures Sunday should trend back above normal
next week. Timing of the potential precip could impact temperatures
late in the week.

A shortwave associated with a larger upper low over Central Canada
will try to break down the highly amplified ridging over the east
coast to start the long term. The guidance has continued to show a
slower trend to this process with the associated frontal system not
moving through the area until Sunday night or early Monday. Rain
associated with the front should start in the morning west of the
NYC metro and then slowly spread eastward through the afternoon.
This continues to look like mainly an overrunning rainfall with
little to no elevated instability. Average amounts range from around
one quarter to one half inch.

The shortwave axis will push offshore later Monday with the front
stalled to our south and west. Another highly amplified ridge builds
across the Great Lakes in response to a large upper low over the
Northern Plains and Northern Rockies. There are conflicting signals
in the guidance for whether or not energy will traverse underneath
the ridge towards the area Monday night. This potential energy would
interact with the stalled front to bring another chance of rain.
However, some of the global guidance weakens the energy with the
height field becoming suppressed over New England in response to an
upper low over the Maritimes. A weak high pressure should build
towards New England which should keep any precip, if it were to
develop, mainly near the coast closer to the stalled front. Have
used the NBM for PoPs with just a low chance near the coast Monday
night.

A piece of the ridge builds overhead on Tuesday, so this should end
up being a mainly dry day. The next forecast challenge will be for
Wednesday through the end of the week. The stationary front to our
south and west should begin lifting back north as a warm front on
Wednesday. The parent low will be associated with the upper low over
the Northern Rockies and Northern Plains, but there may be a few
waves along the warm front. One of these may be enough to initiate
some convection Wednesday afternoon or evening. The upper low then
slowly moves east towards the Great Lakes to end the week. Several
frontal waves may move across or just south the area keeping
conditions unsettled. Timing of these waves is highly uncertain
given a late Day 5 through Day 7 forecast, so have capped PoPs off
at high chance for now.

Sunday will be cool with rain and temperatures in the middle to
upper 50s. Conditions should begin rising back above normal next
week with temperatures in the 70s most afternoons away from the
immediate coastline. Have followed the NBM deterministic, but it
should be noted that there is a fair amount of spread in the
guidance, especially later in the week due to the potential precip.

&&

.AVIATION /06Z SATURDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY/...
High pressure remains in place through tonight.

VFR, although tempo MVFR cigs possible for the NJ terminals
before 10z. MVFR develops this evening, lowering to IFR
overnight. A shower possible starting late this afternoon,
however rainfall doesn`t become likely until Sunday afternoon.

Light easterly flow or variable in direction through at least
12z, then ESE-SE winds around 10kt through the rest of the TAF
period.

    NY Metro (KEWR/KLGA/KJFK/KTEB) TAF Uncertainty...

Tempo MVFR cigs possible for KLGA and KJFK before 10-12z. Chance
that tempo MVFR cigs for KTEB and KEWR do not occur.

OUTLOOK FOR 06Z SUNDAY THROUGH WEDNESDAY...

Saturday Night: IFR. Chance of showers.

Sunday...MVFR/IFR. Showers likely mainly in the afternoon. ESE
winds G15-20kt.

Monday...VFR.

Tuesday... Mainly VFR. Chance of MVFR showers.

Wednesday...MVFR or lower with a chance of showers.

Detailed information, including hourly TAF wind component forecasts,
can be found at: https:/www.weather.gov/zny/n90

&&

.MARINE...
Sub-SCA conditions are forecast to start the weekend with high
pressure along the New England coast maintaining an easterly
flow across the waters. Winds will generally be around 10 kt.

Winds and seas should remain below SCA criteria Sunday the middle of
next week with a weak pressure gradient in place. There may be an
increase in winds closer to 20 kt and seas building to around 4 ft,
but conditions are expected to remain below SCA levels.

&&

.HYDROLOGY...
There are currently no hydrologic concerns through next week.

&&

.OKX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES...
CT...None.
NY...None.
NJ...None.
MARINE...None.

&&

$$

SYNOPSIS...DS/DW
NEAR TERM...DR/DW/MW
SHORT TERM...DW
LONG TERM...DS
AVIATION...JC
MARINE...DS/DW
HYDROLOGY...DS/DW